NOTE
In the US, those frequencies shown as PMR are actually Amateur radio frequencie. Those and frequencies listed as HAM frequencies require an Amateur radio license to use legally.
GMRS Repeaters also require that you have a GMRS liscense plus permission of the repeater owner to use.
Marine frequencies require license to use.
Many of those limitations are not clearly spelled out on that web page. Be AWARE of the limitations, penalties for unliscensed use can be severe.
Andrew Sprott wrote:
Hello, I would like to say hi to you all and hope I shall learn from this list. I found this web-page that lists 98 frequencies for public access, emergency, maritime etc., as well as frequencies reserved for walkie talkie handsets graded for low power, restricted range and another that seems to accommodate higher transmittion power with options for the antenna.
https://radiofreeq.wordpress.com/2013/11/05/program-your-vhf-uhf-transceiver...
There is a cvs file which can be imported and uploaded onto your uv-5r using Chirp. The page also has a neat description of the different types of frequencies, worth printing out.
A good manual for the uv-5r can also be accessed here.
http://www.miklor.com/uv5r/pdf/uv-5r_v1.0.pdf
Andrew
chirp_users mailing list chirp_users@intrepid.danplanet.com http://intrepid.danplanet.com/mailman/listinfo/chirp_users To unsubscribe, send an email to chirp_users-unsubscribe@intrepid.danplanet.com